<h2 id="browser">Browser Information</h2>

<div class="intro">
    HeadJS knows certain information about the browser and exposes that information via CSS & JS
</div>

<div class="code-example" data-title="head.browser">
    <p>These variables are accessible via JavaScript (all the time) so you can apply certain logic depending on specific use-cases</p>

    <ul>
        <li>head.browser.name (string)</li>
        <li>head.browser.version (float)</li>
        <li>head.browser.ie (bool)</li>
        <li>head.browser.ff (bool)</li>
        <li>head.browser.chrome (bool)</li>
        <li>head.browser.ios (bool)</li>
        <li>head.browser.android (bool)</li>
        <li>head.browser.webkit (bool)</li>
        <li>head.browser.opera (bool)</li>
    </ul>

{% highlight js %}
if (head.browser.ie && head.browser.version < 9) {
    /* code specific to IE but only if IE < 9 */
}
{% endhighlight %}

<p>The same information is also exposed via CSS, so that you may apply CSS specific fixes</p>

{% highlight css %}
.ie8 {
    /* code specific to IE8 */
}

.lt-ie9 {
    /* code specific to IE but only if IE < 9 */
}
{% endhighlight %}

    <p>No matter how HeadJS is configured, it will at least generate CSS classes for the current browser & it's version (.ie8, .ff25). Generating classes for (.lt, .lte, .gt, .gte, .eq) including full min/max ranges of browser versions is supported, but not advised since it can generate too much css. By default only current browser + version, and IE6-11 ranges are generated automagically.</p>

    <p>You can select which variables are exposed via CSS in the <a href="#configuration">configuration</a> section.</p>

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